PACE TWO tM ) THE DAILY NEWS Bat uru The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA PubUthrd Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prlnee Rupert Dally News, Limited. Third Avenue. H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing Editor. SUBSCRIITIOX RATES', City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per nwilth V, rPWO streams start from the same A source, but Find their outlet a thousand miles apart. TP" By mall to all parts of the Uritish Empire and the United Your life may flow Into the troubled ocean of debt, or into the placid waters of independence. ' Your Bank Book will decide. The Royal Bank of Canada Prince Rupert Branch F. E Robertson, Manager 2SJ .75 States, In advance, per year . $.V00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 Transient' Display Advertising, per inch per insertion $1.40 Transient Advertising on Front Page, pr inch $2.80 Loeal Readers, per insertion; per line ..... ..... ............. Classified Advertising, per insertion ier vrd Legal Notices, each insertion t agate line 16 Contract Rates on Application Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation. DAILY EDITION tv Saturday, Nov. 12, 1927 (JETTING READY FOR CHRISTMAS A great many people are getting ready for the Christmas and others have scarcely thought about it Yet the great day is only six weeks away. That is not long in which to make plans, to make or purchase presents, to arrange parties and to do those thousand and one things which are necessary in order that the holiday may not fall flat To suggests buying Christmas things early is trite but yet the fact remains that the last-minute shopper has often to take the leavings, the things that have been picked over and handled and discarded. Prince Rupert merchants are making preparations for a good Christmas business and doubtless their anticipations will be realized but it will help them and be a great advantage to the purchasers if the people buy early. This is the time to plan the bujing. In order that no mistakes may be made, the best thing to do is to get pencil and paper and make a list of those to be remembered. Tick them off as they are provided for and revise and eliminate as you go along. It will usually be found that the first list is too long for your own purse and some will have to be struck off. PRESENTS FOR A DOLLAR Time was when a dollar present was sufficient, but today things have changed somewhat and a dollar does not seem much more than an old-fashioned nickel. The result has been that people have in many cases given up pending presents and send personal cards Instead, they are easy to send and not very expensive. Everything will depend upon the personality of the sender and the recipi ent. Many send presents and enclose a personal Christmas card with. them. What is needed, however, is neat little Christmas presents that can be purchased for a dollar or so and can be easilj mailed. Here is a ehanee for the originality of local merchants. If they can put up something in a neat package so that the purchaser has nothing to do but enclose his card, they should appeal strongly to the popular fancy. AGREEING ON ONE DEFINITE MESSAGE Canon Gower-Rees who recently came to Canada from England ,to b. rector of. St., George's, Montreal, says one of the difficulties about religion today is that there are two hundred denominations that cannot agree upon one definite message for the people of the world, inat certainly is a handicap, let they are all looked upon as inrisuan. rossibly one message which a number of them have forgotten is that contained in the line "He went about doing good." The sermons and church services were only incidental. The life was the main thing. It was the personal touch with the people of the world throughout the week that counted. The Christian denominations of the world should get together and find out how many things they have in common. Then work together along those lines and agree to differ on the smaller matter of individual differences. It is to be assumed that church people have brains and could work out such a scheme. Forget that they despise people of other denominations and acknowledge that these despised ones have much in common with the rest and that they in their own way are taking some part in making the world happier. Canon Gower-Rees says that the fact people are not going to church today is no sign of dying interest in religion. He says that those who go today do so because they like to go and not because it is the fashion. Apparently the people like to hear the Canon because a queue formed outside his church hours before the service opened on the last Sunday before he left England. Possibly it is because he has a message that appeals to them. RALDWIN SEIS AN IMPROVEMENT -Premier Baldwin of Great Britain sees an improvement in the condition4of Europe which might lead to more settled conditions leading to permanent peace. With countries that formerly were posed in war now banded together In the interests of peace, there should be possibilities of getting rid of the armaments competition which has been the bane of past days. Production for iweful mir. poses rather thaif for war would changejhe economjc outlook. .It is to be hoped that Mr. Baldwin is not a false' ' prophet. ' The " wt'rld today is getting ready for a change from old methods but the change has to come, slowly. We cannot run world affairs on Utopian principles yet. 7 DIARY FOUND OF JAPANESE Men Kept Locks of Their Hair to Send.o-Huddhist Temple at UtU port Hone RONES WERE WHITENED found two-man diary beginning vary ahortlr after the into cleared from the' awaaau Va OaattU - - . IS RELIGION The diary, which had heretofore bee llr brrn : overlooked, waa touad by United State VT eusveet tntpectori who tbarjufbly ex- ,djr' e class things i .4 ii.ti. m x-. hM ,t Pur al "TV"" vuxm t: Plague added tu honor to starvation in that dreary crulat and four differ ent tune the doomed ncea aaw Mfe ind hope allp orar the hortaaat uat a reacue aeemad immlaent. One of ihetc chajwea was hi Oat form of a lai lain i non-Japa mart teamMp Mch u sighted ao Jiaiaary 77. It w the laat aat aeea by the iU-atarred crew of twelve. Three atrier ahapa. aH Japan- -rt. were alghted by the luekleaa crew DYING TODAY EnclUh Canon Now Rector at Montreal Declares it I Not i LONDON. Hot II OaBOSi A. J tOeirrr-Rc, uc kmw Vtear of BaH- twav, lUadfa, who has fotx- to Canada Uirnn veUInc the death eruhr ol "" U nc-. jniv.p of St George .... a. ...... . .... k Montreal nw hia own reulT to tlx Ryo-Yel Uar ni solved with the Hod- ' U Se::gio:i Drug- when h lug of a aslmite day-by-day record of the delivered Ma urea el! ' " luMm mini waBrfertaas ntr M . - "'- Ukd-wMMd wattta of the Pacific, la the rerasnat V'rct of Oeaaosuke MM-Mimoto. one of the flaheraae n. m Sua; beast tie tailed a akamtbulkw are those peopte maids? who re ao ready to y wh.n: preacher abou'.d or should not do" lacked the Ca.wa "Thousands of of Ulsakl. DeaMBbtr 5 last, i f- vrna m pud !: for an Al foot bailor an Al preaafcsrt I Is he ing on the dot ntlgl been eapewtttkg flrat . : bout providing first ltd in asaav w we nave got wnat e otam. "I wont ru vi bazaars In my church I dmrt believe in tuem. I regard thorn a M UaeuM a&d reflection upon the wegregattoa oerauat uter are uuavbk to loot the MU " CahaaV QoVer-Keaa aMd they must Mt take iHbtf-xnKT churehea to bt a age of ratlflnr dying Thoae wbr eat to Miurdh today meat not becauav jit waa the faahton but btaxn ther 1 liked tat go. "W chrlettaaa talk about one Lord ' yet we bate 300 if the Bra Yel Uaru. but each Ume ' w- the 4ter teaseU aaHed heedlesa of on u - Irtnlte : The maa k . .k- .- mfwage. the fraattc efforta of the toat men toj-. thMU Um attraec tjaetr atteeooo. The diary dtapela erery Utusloa of the fatal crake, and exptatea how the; the etturchea." aqwaototlBf Uaay huiadreda wort uwthle to (ai: when the Caatua areacbad t mk enn orawo ror exren mwiun . im ttm aaaiaia without bring drtrrn aahore or oomtog 4unM formtag outaWe three how be coniavet win otner bbm. im cap- . fOB. th, bnnn tabs sd erew of the Ryo-Tei Uaru canon Ocaer-Reea haa beea to Holi .'ought to the last to sare thetr ship oers over 20 years. He waa efcaptalr nd thrmwlres. But Instead of ac- to tne ftircra fraei 111 to tl. anC ptlng the aid of the etemenU. the mentioned la damps tcbea launtloas men set tttetr ateager sail -jve raJue of the benefice he relln aaalnat the wlads that would nave ' rutsted In England w-j SZt2 net. aveal tham and trtr.i to narlirate tHrit i craft bock home instead of heading for; i he coast of North America. On one day is the eat: "We made thirty miles this day. aaltaH la a northwesterly direction." The rust of the Ill-fated crew died jn March 0. Utee days after the cap- SCHOOL KEPT ARMISTICE DAY ala had painted their names on the: " , , xlar board with the mewage that thry i-niiaren ,wemniea ana aang had deckled thry muet die. He wasi Patriotic SoncH and Kept the Denjlro Hoaal. flsbermaa The en-1 "Silence Together jtccer. the man who oould not repair ' dasnbled motor, died four days Yesterday morning Booth Ssbool cete later: "StcXeeas.'' the Uaey aald. brated Armtetlee Day by ttM puptta al This part of the grtm tecord. which gathering la the aaaemMy room when it printed In pencil In a small flwater- I they listened to a short addraas by th logged daybook, was kept by Sutejl j principal. Miss Mercer That waafol Imv. laawa. tM MaWmmoto and the ' lowed by a two-minute alienor afU eapum also preserved a lock of each ' which all joined la singing the well man'i hair as he died for burial ho i known old hymn. "O Ood our Help li the Bnddbht temple at home. It Is I Ages Past." ' the custom. Japanese Consul H. Kawa-! A chorus was sung by the school hura explained. Although the bodies j "This Land of Freedom." closing wit aiay be lost or buried elsewhere, a lock , "O Canada." after which the pupils file-f the hair la alwaya kept In the temple. , off to their rooms and work proeeede-ll.lllt KEPT j as usual. Popplea were sold to th? Nino little envelopes there are with pupils who wished to buy them, their laat mortal remains of tea of the ; Yesterday the ctty whlatlea blew a: leatb ship s crew, the locks f two who 11 for the two minute lUeace ant died the same day being preserved to j many people on the streets and In the they sighted another Japanese fishing FATHER OF LOCAL it LADY PASSES AWAf IN BELGIUM HOME Mrs. Eddie Hudson last night re. celved -a cable conveying the aad intelligence of the death near Brussells of her father. Mr. Hudson returned only two weeks ago from a visit with ncr parent In Belzium. Her father Advertise In The Dally New ! olllces stopped and marked the oeea- The laat death on record was April slon In the proper manner. 19. and the latt entry In the diary waa Hay 11. On this day Mataumoto wrote n . . aa usual, adding that be had fallen prey to berl-berl. Izawa bad died on March 20. on which day Matsumoto look up the diary and the aacred tak of preserving Uia lacks of his dead -P comradca. On varloua occasions it la written, crait ana MgnalJed frantteaUv their ui thM. Man in the Moon WHO was It won the girls' nighties at the Catholic baaaar? And what did he fish were caught, indicating that the 1 want them for? crew never gave up as long at thetr , strength held out. Once they snared a "big bird." landing him on a tuna! book btted with fiesta. On another' day they sighted a teal, which "must mean that we are ear Alaska-' the He bought a ticket at the fair And thought that It waa fun But what to do with all the goods Is the problem now he's on. 4- faithful chronicler entered In his re- IT is commonly reodrted that alnce COfd. ! the tyiawavr Kt mWtJ,. k. MCiN.U, lii VAIN' . f loolna- tat hii.lruu m. nt, L Mishap o;eit0f k Mm lU.fate' craft the weather is raiher cold, that's 'aUl live aaya alter thev nut out to m tk i crank shaft broke. Throe daya later WITH all the beauty shops In town there Is no excuse for a woman be tne distress. They were not ewn Again! on December 16 they attempted to hall 1 TWO lines difficult to reduce are the a steamer of the T-K.K. Lines. They 1 waist tine and watte line. waved their arms and built a fire on; deck, but to no avail. The aame af-J WIVES are all right except when they ternoon they alghted another fishing J begin to make a man's shirts for him craft Thla. too. slipped over the borl- Then It la time to call a halt. zon without answering their desperate ! signalling. j WHEN you nave a radio set you use No mention is made of the steamer -r-rr-rrr? Wert Ison and likewise the question of ; whether members of the crew prolonged their Uvea by reeorttBg to cannibalism U not touched upon. But the catches of fish were meager, and the fact that ' aU their food was gone on March 6 re-' mains uadlaputed. Also there Is the' mute evidence of the clean-licked and whltenlag bones, which Dr. L. p. 1 Seavey. United States quarantine officer, first official to board the death craft. I declared pointed plainly to cannibalism ' WAS VERY WEAK NERVOUS AND MELANCHOLY Mrs. Geo. McKeniie, Campbell ford, Ont, writes: "A short time ago I wm troubled very bad with my heart and nerves, the cause of it, I think, wa my going through the change of life. "I waa very weak and melancholy, nd nervous I eould hardly bear to hear a cloek ticking, and 1 did not sleep well "I wat advi$d to try not so I tent at ones for a box; took them and got another, and before they were all gone 1 felt good, my serves are line, I do not mind any nolae, and I ran leep well, I can- recommend them too highly to was not In the best of health then "" snnenng a I did." but his death, which was unexpected, J Price SOe. a box at all druggist and has come as a great shock. dealer, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Uilburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out Notfk LAND ACT. ES1 Cone up the juice out of your battery but never seem to use up the static. I keep a lfttle radio act. I house ft in the attic. And -mostly when I turn the dial ; I usher in the'ifeikc. . ONE of the worst feature ibout thla culture we all practice la .having to give j up eating onion. XOTICK OF INTENTION' TO APPLY TO LEASE LAND In Queen Charlotte Island Land Re-cording District of Prince Rupert, and altliat at Tm,s Tr . w . . . . " . m j Muvs, juureaoT la-land. Q.C.I. ; TAKE NOTICE that Mlllerd Packlni Company. Limited, of Vancouver BC occupation Packers, mtenda to apply for a lease of the following described lands- Commencing at a post planted at the ' northeast corner of Lot 88. Q.C.I.: thence northwesterly and along high water mark 1 18 chain, more or less, to a point N 56 3T E. from the NJS. corner tot 140-' thence north 56 3T E. 1-6 chains, more cr iV- .to. low wtr thence southeasterly along low water mark to apoint N. 56 37' E. from the location post: thence 7a chains, more or less to the point of commencement, and con-Ulnlag i acres, more or lees MILLERD PACKINQ COMPANY LIMITED. APPIlc'- Dated September 7. lorr .,otice m- r, , Jt &Trm of anPpiicatlon if rnSJ!? .Kf pWrtlfIcaS of Title for Ihe East half of Lot 2027 S mf rtrt "m to nuun 320 acres, more or lea Satisfactory proof of the loss of v, Certificate of ?he Title covering above ' and having been produced town plratlon of one month from th riil ". off lnal Certificate of Title u dated thl JOthptember. . a Land Registry Office. Prince Itupert 17tb Oi ober 1927, H P MacLEOD. Registrar of Titles. - V V la... m -I-aca rtfwre iirhan . 1 . II: 1 aN . I itprtn p nrp liQinrr i irtfrnnU.. " 7! -a. 1 ,..! t 1. If Y lun ula iiiuaiu cu a MdliuaratOf aiam Mm s . I I I BWW, "a, MAMtAAlllMil Am . I ' ail XVX11U3 ui icituuuuu, d 10UC i i .i speaker nas to be pretty goodb V TT t get by. Mere s one, the K-541 standard eighteen inch cone. St easy to find out how good i is. Test it against any speaka rvuwvaa s.aav iwif uuivui liuiu m aw. . rlnck hirrh. nnroe I hAn miV your choice. Ask your Dealer Wtor Talking MaChina Compasx Victor f ( hem Electric Speaker WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED ' a shipment of beautiful Evening resses the very latest in style, design and Colors to sell REASONABLE PRICES JABOUR BROS.. LTD. Phone 6 15 3rd Avenue and 7th Street For our 'Home Lovers Club LEATHER UPHOLSTERED CHAIR AND ROCKER SETS $30.60 Rarn'o'c HnmR Furnishings a a aw - m. --w ., 3rd Avenue phone Advertise in "The Daily Netf